EU Enlargement
Georgia was granted candidate country status on 14 December 2023. On 27 June 2024, the European Council announced that the EU accession process for Georgia was “de facto halted”.
Georgia applied for EU membership in March 2022 and was granted status of the candidate country in December 2023, on the understanding that Georgia implements nine steps set out in the European Commission recommendation of November 2023.
Half a year later, on 27 June 2024 the European Council announced that the EU accession process for Georgia was “de facto halted”, as a consequence of democratic backsliding.
On 17 October 2024, the European Council recalled that the EU accession process for Georgia was stopped and called on Georgia to adopt democratic, comprehensive and sustainable reforms, in line with the core principles of European integration.
In the 2024 enlargement report on Georgia (extract on Georgia), released on 30 October, the European Commission assessed that the granting of candidate status to Georgia had not been followed by sufficient political commitment of the authorities to implement the necessary reforms for the country’s progress on the EU path. It recommends that Georgia revert to the implementation of the nine steps as a matter of priority (extract on Georgia). Unless Georgia reverts the current course of action, which jeopardises its EU path, and demonstrates tangible efforts to address outstanding concerns and key reforms, the Commission will not be in a position to consider recommending opening negotiations with Georgia.
“The 2024 enlargement report on Georgia shows backsliding on 4 of the 9 steps identified when Georgia was granted candidate status. For the moment EU leaders have decided to stop Georgia’s accession process to the EU. The future of EU-Georgia relations is now in the hands of the Georgian leadership. The EU’s door remains open and today’s report offers a clear path to re-engagement if there is genuine political will on the Georgian side.” – stated EU Ambassador to Georgia, Pawel Herczynski
The nine steps set out in the 2023 Enlargement Package include fighting disinformation and foreign information manipulation, improving alignment with the EU common foreign and security policy, addressing the issue of political polarisation, ensuring a free, fair and competitive electoral process, improving parliamentary oversight and institutional independence, ensuring a holistic and effective judicial reform, addressing the effectiveness of the Anti-Corruption Bureau, ensuring a systemic approach to de-oligarchisation, and improving the protection of human rights and ensuring meaningful involvement of civil society.
Assessment of the Implementation of the Nine Steps – 2024 Enlargement Report on Georgia
Nine Steps Set Out in the Enlargement Package 2023
The Step-by-step Guide to the EU Accession Process
High-level Statements on the EU Commission’s November 2023 recommendation
“My sincere congratulations to all political leaders in Georgia. My sincere congratulations to the government, to the opposition, to the Parliament, to the President, to the civil society, to the media, but first and foremost – to the people of Georgia, who have always consistently, in an unwavering way, supported Georgia’s European path. This is a big recognition from the European Union of the progress achieved within the last years. European aspirations are uniting all Georgians.”- The EU Ambassador to Georgia, Pawel Herczynski
Watch his full statement ⇒